QT_QuickTake

Market Quick Take - 17 June 2026

Macro 3 minutes to read
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Market Quick Take – 17 June 2026


Market drivers and catalysts

  • Equities: US tech cooled, Europe edged higher on banks, and Asia stayed split between chip strength and China weakness.
  • Commodities: Crude extends slide on expectations of near-term supply surge; gold steadies above USD 4,300 ahead of FOMC.
  • Fixed Income: Yields ease back on downdraft in crude oil prices.
  • Currencies: SEK firm ahead of Riksbank meeting. USD choppy ahead of FOMC meeting.
  • Macro: FOMC Rate Decision

Macro

  • Iran is set to receive a USD 300 billion redevelopment fund as part of a 14-point draft memorandum, provided by the US and its allies. The US and Iran are set to sign an interim deal in Switzerland on Friday, granting Tehran broad economic incentives and allowing the immediate resumption of oil exports. Separately, Tehran threatened a “harsh response” if Israel doesn’t stop Lebanon attacks.
  • UK May CPI came in at 0.2% MoM and 2.8% YoY versus 0.4%/3.0% expected and 2.8% in April. Core CPI was 2.6% versus 2.7% expected and 2.5% in April. Services inflation came in at 3.7% YoY versus 3.6% expected and 3.2% in April.
  • US May housing starts slumped 15.4% m/m to an annualized pace of 1.177 million, the weakest since 2020 and far below all estimates, led by a 40.2% drop in multifamily starts. Permits fell 0.7% to 1.413 million.
  • US May import prices rose 1.9% m/m and 6.7% y/y, while export prices rose 1.3% m/m and 11.2% y/y, all above consensus.
  • Markets are also focused on the FOMC meeting, where rates are expected to be kept on hold in Kevin Warsh’s first meeting as Chair. He is not expected to submit a dot to the projections, having prominently criticized what he characterizes as the Fed’s excessive transparency. Citi meanwhile said the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates this year – potentially three times – as the labor market weakens and oil prices ease.

Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)

  • 0730 – Sweden Riksbank Rate Decision
  • 0800 – IEA’s Monthly Oil Market Report
  • 1230 – US May Retail Sales
  • 1430 – EIA’s Weekly Crude and Fuel Stock Report
  • 1800 – FOMC Rate Decision
  • 1830 – Fed Chair Warsh press conference

G7 leaders' summit in France through Wednesday.

Earnings events

  • Wednesday: Jabil
  • Thursday: Accenture, Kroger

For all macro, earnings, and dividend events check Saxo’s calendar.


Equities

  • USA: The S&P 500 fell 0.6% to 7,511.35, the Nasdaq 100 lost 1.9% and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.2%, while the Dow rose 0.6% to a fresh record at 51,999.67. The split came as chipmakers cooled after a strong run, with the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index down 5.7%, while financials offered a useful reminder that markets have more than one engine. Nvidia fell 2.4% on chip weakness, Microsoft dropped 1.5% as large technology names softened, Cboe Global Markets slid 9.5%, and JPMorgan rose 3.7% as banks led. SpaceX added 4.8%, keeping IPO excitement alive ahead of the Federal Reserve decision.
  • Europe: The Stoxx Europe 600 rose 0.3%, the Euro Stoxx 50 gained 0.5% to a fresh record close, the FTSE 100 advanced 0.6% to 10,494, and the DAX was little changed at 24,910. Banks led the region as investors favoured earnings resilience and higher rates, while technology was the weakest sector. UniCredit jumped 4.2% after Bank of America named it a top pick and lifted its price target to a Street high, HSBC gained 1.8% to support London, and Ericsson fell 4.2% after announcing that longtime chief executive Börje Ekholm will leave in October. Investors now watch whether bank strength can offset another pause in the technology trade.
  • Asia: The Nikkei 225 closed slightly higher and briefly topped 70,000 for the first time, while the Kospi rose 2.1% to 8,726 and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 1.4% to 24,494. Japan found support after the Bank of Japan rate hike, while South Korea stayed the regional bright spot as SK Hynix gained 4.1% on memory-chip demand. China-linked equities lagged after weak retail sales, with the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index down 1.6% to 8,240 and the CSI 300 off 0.2%. Tencent fell 2.7% and Longfor Group dropped 8.9%, showing investors still preferred AI chip exposure over Hong Kong internet and property names.

 


Commodities

  • Crude prices continue to slide, with Brent falling below USD 79/b and extending its five-day decline to around 16%, as traders focus on the short-term supply relief expected from the US-Iran deal. The agreement is likely to trigger the release of an estimated 80–120 million barrels currently stranded aboard tankers in the Persian Gulf awaiting passage through the Strait of Hormuz. While the physical release of these barrels is expected to take weeks rather than days, the market remains focused on the immediate supply surge rather than what follows. Once this initial wave has passed, attention may shift towards the need to rebuild depleted global inventories and restart thousands of wells across the region, a process that could ultimately tighten balances and limit downside price risks. Focus today turns to the IEA’s monthly market report and the EIA’s weekly inventory update after the API reported an 8.3-million-barrel decline in US crude stocks, including a sizeable draw at Cushing, the key delivery hub for WTI futures.
  • Gold remains supported above USD 4,300 as it continues to consolidate following last week’s capitulation-style sell-off. The metal has found support from easing inflation concerns as crude oil and refined fuel prices extend their five-day decline, potentially reopening the door to US rate cuts later this year should inflation moderate and labour market conditions soften further. Adding to the supportive backdrop, both the dollar and US Treasury yields have weakened ahead of today’s FOMC meeting. Traders will be watching closely for any guidance from Chair Kevin Warsh on the inflation outlook, as well as clues on how the Federal Reserve balances still-elevated price pressures against signs of slowing economic momentum.
  • Aluminum, which reached a four-year high earlier this month before retreating 10% as markets priced in the return of Persian Gulf supply, has seen a small rebound this week, reflecting growing uncertainty about the speed at which the Middle East’s sizeable aluminum industry can restore production, potentially limiting supply growth at a time when Chinese output continues to expand at a robust pace.


Fixed Income

  • US Treasuries rallied slightly, perhaps in part on a modest setback for risk sentiment, but also on the chunky additional slide in crude oil prices, even if sensitivity to the direction of crude oil prices has declined recently. The benchmark 2-year treasury yield dropped back from highs Tuesday near 4.07% to fall over two basis points to under 4.05% early Wednesday ahead of the first FOMC meeting to be led by new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh. The benchmark 10-year yield fell some four basis points Tuesday and is hovering early Wednesday near its multi-week low, trading a basis point above that 4.42% low.
  • Bonds rallied in Europe Tuesday as crude oil prices fell, especially further out the curve, as the benchmark German 10-year Bund yield fell more than two basis points, posting the lowest daily close, at 2.93%, since mid-March.
  • Japan’s government bond yields fell significantly, in part in sympathy with falling US treasury yields but also as crude oil fell dramatically Tuesday. The benchmark 2-year JGB yield fell Wednesday 2.5 basis points to close below 1.39% for the first time in two weeks. The benchmark 10-year JGB yield erased much of the prior day’s yield surge, dropping back over four basis points to just below 2.60%.


Currencies

  • The US dollar is rangebound ahead of a pivotal FOMC meeting, the first to be led by new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh. EURUSD is stuck gyrating near the 1.1600 level and USDJPY remains above 160.00 with little energy and little evidence in options implied volatilities that Wednesday’s new FOMC policy statement or Warsh press conference will bring strong surprises.
  • Sweden’s krone trades near two-week highs versus the euro ahead of the Riksbank meeting early Wednesday, with the bank expected to deliver a steady message on its forecast to maintain the policy rate at 1.75%, given recently very low inflation readings in Sweden and the significant resetting lower of crude oil prices over the last two weeks. Key recent resistance near 11.00 has held three times since late March, all through the wobbly market sentiment over the course of the Iran war.

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